CHAPTER 5 TAIWAN Key Findings • In 2019, General Secretary Xi Jinping made clear his increas- ingly uncompromising stance toward Taiwan’s independent sta- tus and sense of urgency regarding unification. Beijing inten- sified its multipronged campaign to coerce and isolate Taiwan, including by supporting Taiwan politicians Beijing finds palat- able, while opposing and seeking to discredit those it does not, particularly Taiwan’s elected government headed by President Tsai Ing-wen. Guided by this policy, Beijing redoubled its efforts to bypass Taiwan’s central government by conducting negotia- tions with unelected political parties, groups, and individuals. • The deliberate crossing of the Taiwan Strait median line by Chinese fighter aircraft in March 2019 was the first such cross- ing in 20 years and marked a sharp escalation in the military pressure Beijing has increasingly applied against Taipei since General Secretary Xi assumed power in 2012. China signaled that its intensifying campaign of military coercion had become official policy in a key policy document released in July 2019, while the continued growth of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army’s (PLA) capabilities and budget threatened to overturn any remaining semblance of cross-Strait military balance. • As Beijing escalated diplomatic, economic, cultural, and polit- ical warfare against Taiwan, evidence emerged that it sought to influence Taiwan’s November 2018 local elections, including through traditional Taiwan media and disinformation spread through social media to exacerbate social divisions and under- mine public confidence in the ruling Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) government. Allegations that Beijing intervened on behalf of Taiwan presidential challenger Han Kuo-yu of the Nationalist Party (Kuomintang, or KMT) in his 2018 Kaohsiung mayoral campaign raised questions over whether it may be do- ing so again in the lead-up to Taiwan’s presidential election in January 2020. • The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) adopted new tactics to leverage Taiwan media in support of its political goals, with ev- idence building that Beijing has shaped coverage of cross-Strait relations and potentially Taiwan’s presidential election through direct partnerships with some major Taiwan media outlets. These partnerships have included China’s Taiwan Affairs Of- fice commissioning stories and giving instructions to editorial managers. (445) 446 • Concerns in Taiwan over Beijing’s desired “one country, two systems” unification model for Taiwan were amplified by 2019’s massive protest movement in Hong Kong, which is governed by the same model and has seen the autonomy the model promises steadily erode. Presidential contenders from both major political parties in Taiwan assailed the “one country, two systems” model as unacceptable for any future sovereign agreement between the two sides. • Taiwan took a series of steps to enhance its military capabilities and implement its new Overall Defense Concept. These mea- sures included the island’s largest increase in its defense budget in more than a decade, breaking ground on the facility that will build Taiwan’s indigenous submarines, allocating funding for the procurement of 60 new small fast-attack missile boats, and expediting production of new missile defense systems and mobile land-based antiship missile platforms. • U.S.-Taiwan cooperation expanded into new areas as the United States took significant steps to support Taiwan, including the Trump Administration’s approval of a landmark arms sale of new fighter aircraft to Taiwan, the first meeting between U.S. and Taiwan national security advisors since 1979, and a more assertive approach to U.S. Navy transits of the Taiwan Strait. However, talks under the Trade and Investment Framework Agreement have stalled since October 2016. Recommendations The Commission recommends: • Congress direct the U.S. secretary of state to submit to Congress a report on actions that have been and will be taken by the United States to counter Beijing’s attempts to isolate Taiwan’s democratically-elected leaders and to strengthen support for Taiwan’s engagement with the international community, includ- ing actions the Administration will take should Beijing increase its coercion against Taiwan. The report should: ○ List measures the U.S. government has taken and will take to expand interactions between U.S. and Taiwan government officials in accordance with the Taiwan Travel Act. ○ Formulate a strategy to expand development aid and securi- ty assistance to countries that maintain diplomatic ties with Taiwan. ○ Detail steps to expand multilateral collaboration involving Taiwan and other democracies to address global challenges, such as the Global Cooperation and Training Framework’s workshops on epidemics, cybersecurity, and media literacy. • Congress direct the Office of the Director of National Intelli- gence to conduct a study on the impact of a Taiwan Strait con- tingency on the supply of high-technology products to the Unit- ed States from Taiwan, China, Japan, and South Korea. • Congress direct the U.S. Department of Defense to prepare a classified study on how PLA modernization targets to be met by 447 2035 will impact the ability of the United States to uphold its obligation established in the Taiwan Relations Act to maintain the ability to resist any resort to force that would jeopardize the security of Taiwan. This study would be briefed to all relevant committees of jurisdiction and provide the basis for a 15-year plan of action aimed at deterring Beijing from making a mili- tary attempt to unify Taiwan with China. • Congress enact legislation to enhance U.S.-Taiwan security co- operation. Such legislation should contain provisions to: ○ Clarify that direct interactions between uniformed members of the armed forces of the United States and Taiwan in sup- port of Taiwan’s self-defense capability are fully consistent with the Taiwan Relations Act and the U.S. position of main- taining relations with the people of Taiwan. ○ Direct the Administration to increase military exchanges and training with Taiwan, including but not limited to humanitar- ian assistance and disaster relief, search and rescue, and any other skills supporting regional peace and security. ○ Direct the Administration to permit active-duty Taiwan mili- tary officers to wear their uniforms during visits to the Unit- ed States. ○ Direct the Administration to permit active-duty U.S. military officers to wear their uniforms during visits to Taiwan. • Congress raise the threshold of congressional notification on sales of defense articles and services to Taiwan to the highest tier set for U.S. allies and partners. Congress also terminate any requirement to provide prior notification of maintenance and sustainment of military equipment and capabilities previously sold to Taiwan. Introduction April 2019 marked the 40th anniversary of the signing into law of the Taiwan Relations Act (TRA) of 1979, which set the foundation for continued ties between the United States and Taiwan following the United States’ severing of diplomatic ties with the Republic of China (Taiwan) in 1978. In the 40 years since the TRA’s signing, Taiwan has moved away from martial law and become a thriving multi-party democracy. Taiwan has a robust civil society and rule of law that protects universal human rights, open public discourse, and a free and independent media. The vibrancy of Taiwan’s dem- ocratic system is on display in the ongoing campaigns for the 2020 presidential and legislative elections, as it was in its November 2018 municipal and county elections. In addition to being a model of a successful democracy for the Indo-Pacific region, Taiwan has become an increasingly important economic and geostrategic partner for the United States. While Washington stopped recognizing Taipei as the government of Chi- na in 1979, it never accepted Beijing’s position—that Taiwan was part of the People’s Republic of China (PRC)—as its own policy. Congress and each successive U.S. administration have reiterated the U.S. commitment to maintaining separate relations with Tai- 448 wan until its final status is settled by peaceful means acceptable to the people of Taiwan. Until that happens, the U.S. government has committed to make available to Taiwan the defense arti- cles and services necessary to enable it to maintain a sufficient self-defense capability. Meanwhile, throughout 2019 Beijing adopted a more coercive ap- proach, seeking to isolate and intimidate Taiwan into unification on Beijing’s terms. In January 2019, General Secretary of the CCP Xi Jinping delivered a major speech on Beijing’s Taiwan policy in which he claimed that Taiwan’s unification with the PRC was inev- itable and indicated that the “one country, two systems” model was the only acceptable arrangement for unification. That model, which has steadily eroded in Hong Kong, has been roundly rejected by the Taiwan public and multiple Taiwan presidential administrations. Beijing also increased its military coercion of Taiwan, releasing a defense white paper articulating a forceful approach to cross-Strait policy and carrying out a set of military intimidation measures against the island not seen in 20 years. In the political sphere, Beijing wielded a range of diplomatic, eco- nomic, military, and political warfare tools as part of a multipronged coercion campaign to shape Taiwan’s cross-Strait policies to its lik- ing and isolate Taipei from the international community. These tools include promises of
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